Phosphonates – Scale Inhibitors

Referencing Webster’s dictionary, the definition of “sequester” is to take into custody until a controversy, claim, etc. is settled. In regard to water treatment and the commonality between phosphonates and the definition above, phosphonates prevent scale formation by sequestering the precipitate until it dissolves- and the mattered is settled. Once the precipitate dissolves, the sequestering agent is released, and is then free to repeat the process. Phosphonates are sequestering agents utilized in industrial water treatment to control the precipitation of deposits onto heat transfer surfaces. The term used to better describe phosphonates is “Threshold Inhibitors.” Threshold inhibitors function by an adsorption mechanism; by which, they adsorb onto newly forming crystals that would eventually precipitate out as scale.

Phosphonates are organophosphorus compounds, and are one of the most commonly used scale inhibitors in industrial water treatment; alongside low molecular weight polymers. In comparison, polymers maintain superior dispersing properties over phosphonates. But due to their electrostatic charge, adsorbed phosphonates further inhibit agglomerate formation by dispersion. In addition to scale inhibition and particle dispersion, phosphonates also serve as a corrosion inhibitor for carbon steel; as they are effective chelating agents. Phosphonates are highly water-soluble, and they exhibit outstanding resistance to oxidizing agents. Conclusively, they are exceptional water treatment additives because of their multifunctional properties, and the synergistic performance that they exhibit when added to formulations.

The industrial uses of sequestering agents for scale inhibition are primarily in cooling and boiler water treatment, desalination and reverse osmosis (RO) systems, and in oilfield drilling water treatment. They are also used in metal finishing, seawater evaporators and to clean ion exchange resins, among others. As a chelating agent, phosphonates are widely used in the manufacturing of pulp & paper and in the textile industry, to serve as “peroxide bleach stabilizers.”

ATMP (50%) – Amino tris (Methylenephosphonic Acid)
HEDP (60%) – 1-Hydroxyethylidene-1,1-Diphosphonic Acid
PBTC (50%) – Phosphonobutane-Tricarboxylic Acid